i do not like this
The Northern Hemisphere experiences winter when the South Pole is pointed toward the Sun.
North is the direction toward the North Pole or geographic North.
Winter
North of course! There is no other way to travel.
magnetic north north pole =magnetic south
If one end the Earth's axis always pointed toward the sun, then one pole would ALWAYS be in daylight, and the other pole would NEVER see daylight. Which is which would depend on which end of the axis pointed toward the sun. The Earth's "poles" are the ends of its axis of rotation. It's not possible for either end of the axis to point toward the equator or toward my latitude.
the north is pointed at the northest part of our planet ant the south is is at pointed at the southest part of longitutef
When a magnet is freely suspended, its north pole will align itself with the Earth's magnetic north, which is actually a magnetic south pole. Therefore, the north pole of the magnet will point toward the geographic North Pole, while the south pole of the magnet will point toward the geographic South Pole. This alignment occurs due to the magnetic field of the Earth.
The North Pole always points towards the North Star, and the South Pole points towards the opposite direction. During the winter season in the Northern Hemisphere, the North Pole is tilted away from the Sun, and vice versa during the summer season. The opposite is true for the Southern Hemisphere.
I believe this is correct: Theoretically, the axis is infinitely long, extending into space toward the north from the north pole, and toward the south from the south pole. When you reach the north pole, that is not the farthest north that you can travel; if you are able to go up, you will continue going north.
You would be falling at the South Pole
The greatest possible number of degrees of latitude is 90. Latitude is measured from the equator toward the North Pole or toward the South Pole. The equator is zero degrees of latitude. The North Pole is 90 degrees N, and the South Pole is 90 degrees S.